Jacqueline Moss

In the 1980s, she had a travel business touring art and architecture in Europe, Asia and South America.

[2][3] In 1977, she began leading specialized tour groups to Europe to visit private collections and artists' studios, as well as museums like the Dutch Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo,[4][5] known for its extensive collection of paintings by Vincent van Gogh.

[3] Prior to teaching on the university level, she taught at the Daycroft School in Greenwich, Connecticut.

[16] By the time Moss returned just three years later, in 1985, tourism had grown from 230,000 in 1978[16] to 1.4 million foreigners and non-Asian faces in major cities were no longer a novelty.

[17] She also took groups to Egypt,[3] Japan,[18] Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, the Soviet Union,[6] Brazil,[19] and other countries.

His last book, Let Me Help You, contained three photos of her, one as an infant, one as a toddler and one as a young girl playing a piano duet with her brother, Roger.

Jacqueline Moss with Joseph Hirshhorn at his Greenwich sculpture garden, 1970